National Family Medicine Residency Program, HealthPoint, The Wright Center, Auburn, United States of America.
Afr J Prim Health Care Fam Med. 2022 Aug 16;14(1):e1-e7. doi: 10.4102/phcfm.v14i1.3506.
The Declaration of Astana marked a revived global interest in investing in primary care as a means to achieve universal healthcare. Family medicine clinicians are uniquely trained to provide high-quality, comprehensive primary care throughout the lifespan. Yet little focus has been placed on understanding the needs of family medicine training programs.
This study aims to assess broad patterns of strengths and resource challenges faced by academic programs that train family medicine clinicians.
An anonymous online survey was sent to family medicine faculty using World Organization of Family Doctors (WONCA) listservs.
Twenty-nine representatives of academic family medicine programs from around the globe answered the survey. Respondents cited funding for the program and/or individual trainees as one of either their greatest resources or greatest limitations. Frequently available resources included quality and quantity of faculty and reliable clinical training sites. Frequently noted limitations included recruitment capacity and social capital. Over half of respondents reported their program had at some point faced a disruption or gap in its ability to recruit or train, most often because of loss of government recognition. Reflecting on these patterns, respondents expressed strong interest in partnerships focusing on faculty development and research collaboration.
This study provides a better understanding of the challenges family medicine training programs face and how to contribute to their sustainability and growth, particularly in terms of areas for investment, opportunities for government policy and action and areas of collaboration.
《阿斯塔纳宣言》标志着全球重新燃起了对投资初级保健的兴趣,将其作为实现全民医疗保健的一种手段。家庭医学临床医生经过专门培训,可以在整个生命周期内提供高质量、全面的初级保健。然而,人们很少关注了解家庭医学培训计划的需求。
本研究旨在评估培训家庭医学临床医生的学术项目所面临的广泛优势和资源挑战模式。
使用世界家庭医生组织(WONCA)的名录,向全球各地的家庭医学教师发送了一份匿名在线调查。
来自全球的 29 名学术家庭医学项目代表回答了这项调查。受访者将为项目和/或个别学员提供资金列为他们最大的资源或最大的限制之一。经常可用的资源包括师资的质量和数量以及可靠的临床培训场所。经常提到的限制包括招聘能力和社会资本。超过一半的受访者报告说,他们的项目在某个时候面临着招聘或培训能力的中断或差距,最常见的原因是失去政府的认可。在反思这些模式时,受访者表示对专注于教师发展和研究合作的伙伴关系非常感兴趣。
本研究更好地了解了家庭医学培训项目面临的挑战,以及如何促进其可持续性和增长,特别是在投资领域、政府政策和行动的机会以及合作领域。